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Saturday, 12 August 2017

I can't quite believe it was a year ago today that my debut psychological thriller novel, SAVING SOPHIE was published in ebook!

I remember waiting until after midnight to watch it magically appear on my kindle - and feeling a mixture of excitement and nerves!

A very proud moment!

I am so grateful for all the support from family, friends and also reviewers and bloggers, who made the day so special and have continued to support me during this first year. It was definitely a dream come true moment and I can't thank my agent, Anne Williams, and team Avon enough for helping me achieve it!

So, a year on and book 2, BAD SISTER is less than 8 weeks away from publication and I'm nearing the end of writing book 3. I've had the pleasure of meeting many wonderful authors at various events and can finally say I feel like an author too now.

I'm thrilled that I'm able to write for a living and look forward to future projects. Thank you to everyone who has bought a copy of SAVING SOPHIE.

Wednesday, 2 August 2017

The Girls in the Water : A completely gripping serial killer thriller with a shocking twist (Detectives King and Lane Book 1)Victoria Jenkins lives with her husband in South Wales, where she writes crime fiction and teaches English. The Girls in the Water is her debut novel, the first featuring Detective Inspector Alex King and Detective Constable Chloe Lane. The second book in the series will be published in late 2017.

1)Congratulations, Victoria, IT’S PUBLICATION DAY! Tell us in three words how you’re feeling right now:

Lucky, excited, hopeful.

2)Describe
your novel in ONE sentence:

Two female detectives hunt a killer in
South Wales, with devastating consequences that hit uncomfortably close to
home.

3)How
are you celebrating publication day?

Quietly. I will probably be glued to my
laptop for a big chunk of the day – it’s become a third arm. The support online
– both from people I know and those I’ve never met – has been incredible. I
feel so lucky, and very grateful. I’ll be going out for dinner in the evening
with my husband and my sister – it wouldn’t be a celebration without food
involved at some point!

4)Why/When
did you decide to write your first novel?

The
Girls in the Water isn’t the first book I’ve written – I’ve written several
over the past decade, although most of them I’d be too embarrassed to ever have
my name associated with! I’d written from a young age, so it was just a case of
finding the ‘right’ thing to write. I wrote this book after the book that
grabbed the interest of my agent failed to get a publishing deal – it felt like
a case of ‘now or never’, so the pressure turned out to be a good thing for me.

5)How
long was it from the first submission of your completed manuscript to agents,
to this day?

The time between getting signed by an agent
and getting the book deal was eleven months, but between finishing The Girls in the Water and getting the
publishing deal with Bookouture was a space of about four months. While
initially submitting to agents I’d read a lot of ‘Agent on Monday…book deal by
Friday’ stories, but the reality for most is a lot different and I think from
speaking to other authors that my experience is probably closer to the norm.
It’s a waiting game, but it’s one that’s well worth playing. The best way to
kill the time is to get on with writing something else.

6)So
far, what has been the biggest surprise/shock about becoming a published
author?

The editing process. Structural edits, line
edits, copy edits, proofreads…it can feel never-ending at times! The final
version of The Girls in the Water is
very different to the first, but the editing process is there for a reason, so
the time is well spent.

7) What
are you most looking forward to as a published author?

Being able to justify the amount of time I
spend in my pyjamas.

Ok, let’s get down to the writing process

8)Which
authors inspired your writing?

I love Linwood Barclay’s books. In my
letters to agents, I used to write something along the lines of, ‘I’d like to
be a female, British Linwood Barclay’. The stories are just so accessible;
they’re the kind I start, get lost in from the first page, and then find I’ve
finished within a matter of days. Not an author, but while writing The Girls in the Water I was
binge-watching the BBC2 series The Fall.
I think some of the darker elements of the book definitely took an influence
from that.

9)How
long did it take you to write The Girls
in the Water?

The first draft that was sent to my agent
took about six months. She then gave me revisions before submitting to
publishers, and then there were all the additional edits that came from my
editor at Bookouture. In total, I think around nine months was spent on the
book.

10)What
was your first draft like?

The very first draft was just the bare
bones of the story, probably around 80,000 words – I always like to get the
plot down first and then go back and add the descriptions of characters and
places, as well as the details relating to police procedure.

11)How
did you find the editing process

a
- before you had an editor?

Difficult. Once I’d got my descriptions down (which quite often weren’t
detailed enough) I’d find it hard to
see beyond what was there on the screen in front of me. A fresh pair of eyes is
definitely needed when it comes to editing.

b - and now you do?

Far easier. Having someone else’s input makes you able to see the things
you’ve missed, or the things that just don’t make sense. Sometimes they’re
glaringly obvious and I’ll think, ‘well how did I not notice that?’ but when
you’ve looked at something so often and for so long, it’s almost as though you
stop seeing what’s staring you in the face!

12)When you write do you need music, or silence?

A few years back I used to listen to music
all the time while writing, always through headphones. I don’t know why that’s
changed, but now I find I need total silence. I know a lot of people say they
need noise and life around them, but I’d get nothing done. I am easily
distracted.

13)What is your guilty pleasure when writing?

I keep my sweet tooth under much better
control these days than I did when I was younger, but only because I tend not
to buy biscuits and cake too often – if it’s in the house, it won’t be there
for long. I drink a lot of tea while I’m writing, but I think this is more to
do with finding something to distract myself with when things aren’t going to
plan rather than the tea itself!

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4)What is your favouritepart of the
writing process?And least favourite?

Favourite part? The End. Only joking. My favourite part is when I’m so immersed in
something that I get lost in it. I think that’s why I’ve always written:
writing means a break from the real world. I love the real world too, but like
anywhere else, I don’t want to be there 24/7! My least favourite part: writer’s
block. Urgh. I sometimes go for weeks without writing a single word,
particularly when I’m in the early stages of a book. Getting past the 10k word
mark is always a relief; I start to feel as though I may sort-of know what I’m
doing at this point, rather than just making things up as I go along (which I
suppose is what I’m doing anyway!)

15)Did you need to conduct any research for your
novel? How did you approach it?

Police procedure was all new to me until
about eighteen months ago. I’ve been lucky that a friend’s uncle and my
husband’s cousin are both police officers and they gave me help with some of
the details needed for The Girls in the
Water. I had to do some pretty grim research on drowning victims and the
effects of water on corpses too, most of which was done on the internet.

16)Now you have a book deal – with deadlines (!)
– how has that affected your writing process?

Weirdly enough, the pressure of deadlines
seems to have been a good thing for me. Knowing I’ve got a timeframe to work
within (as well as now having people I have to keep happy!) has focused my mind
quite a bit. There will still be days when I write nothing, but I try not to
panic too much. One day I can write nothing; the next I might get down 6,000
words. The process seems to have its own rules!

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7)What
do you do in your ‘spare’ time?

I wish I had an exciting answer for this
one, but I am quite boring. When I’m not working, I spend a lot of time with my
family. I try to read as much and as often as possible, but this is usually done
at bedtime. I’m a bit useless at relaxing; whenever I do get the chance, I tend
to spend the whole time feeling guilty about not doing something else!

18)What’s
coming next?

Book 2 is written – I’m just at the stage
of completing the final set of edits. I feel a huge pressure with this one, as
I obviously want readers to love the characters enough to stick with them for
Book 3. I hit the 10k word mark of book 3 today, so I’m past the dreaded point
I mentioned earlier!